No, it's not a generalized suffix tree. What I implemented here is basically the suffixtree of the concatenation of the strings, which has the same sort of space and time complexity for operations as a generalized suffix tree.

Note that I don't expect that a pure perl version of suffix trees will be very usable for huge strings since the memory overhead of the datastructures will just be too much. This stuff needs an XS module.


In reply to Re^3: finding longest common substring by thospel
in thread finding longest common substring by revdiablo

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